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FIFTEEN YEARS
OF BLACK-DRAUGHT
Black-Draught Highly Rec
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Fifteen Years
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THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
DEBS NOMINATED
FOR PRESIDENT
BY SOCIALISTS
NEW YORK, May 13. —Eugene V.
Debs, federal convict No. 2,253, was
nominated by acclamation for the
presidency of the United States at
the Socialist party’s national conven
tion here today.
Seymour Stedman, of Chicago, gen
eral counsel for the party, received
the nomination for vice president
over Mrs. Kate Bichards Hare, of
Kansas City, now serving a peniten
tiary sentence for violation of the
espionage act. The vote on the first
ballot was 106 to 26. This later was
made unanimous.
After twelve minutes, the demon
. stration was still at its height. The
1 applause, after being continued for
I five minutes, was broken by the
I singing of the “Internationale.” The
J cheering then was resumed, mingled
with strains of the "Marseillaise”
and “Hymn of Free Russia.”
Debs is in the federal penitentiary
at Atlanta, Ga.
He began serving a ten-year sen
tence for violation of the war-time
espionage act April 13, 1919, when
he entered the Moundsville, W. Va„
federal pentitentiary after all appeals
in his behalf had failed. He was re
moved to the Atlanta prison last
June.
Debs is 65 years old. His presi
dential nomination today is the fifth
his party has given him. He was a
Democrat before he became a Social
ist. In the late seventies he served
two terms in the Indiana legislature
from Terra Haute, his home town,
and figured considerably in local
politics before that. He once was a
candidate for congress from the Fifth
Indiana district. In 1894, from May
to November, he served a sentence in
jail for contempt of court in an Illi
nois conspiracy case while an ac
knowledged leader of the Socialist
party in this country.
His present imprisonment resulted
from governmental investigation of
a speech in Canton, Ohio, on June 16,
1918, which led to his arrest two
weeks later for opposing the war and
urging labor to cease all activities
which in any way tended to prolong
it.
Every atom of influence and energy
in the ‘Socialist party went into the
fight to keep Debs out of jail, but
the United States supreme court and
Attorney General Palmer turned
down each appeal in his behalf. Dater
the American Federation of Labor
convention, in June, 1919, after heat
ed debate, voted down a resolution
which favored clemency for him.
The name of Debs as “head of the
Socialist party in America,” has gone
around the world. Soviet Bussia
sought his release in appeals to this
government through diplomatic chan
nels, and he was “slated” by Moscow
communist congress in March of last
year to be “the future soviet presi
dent of the United States.” With
Premier Lenine, of Bussia, he last
June was elected an honorary presi
dent of the Korean labor congress.
Badicals in the Socialist convention
here today received their second de
feat at the hands of the conserva
tives, when an attempt to substitute
the left wing platform, declaring for
a soviet form of government in the
United States, was defeated by a
vote of 74'to 55.
The platform drawn by the conser
vatives headed by Morris Hillquit,
was being considered and the pre
amble had been adopted with a few
minor changes when Irwin St. John
Tucker moved the substitution of tne
radical program.
In the debate which followed Tuck
er characterized the Hillquit platform
as a “surrender of the Socitlist party”
and G. A. Hoehn, of Missouri, answer
ed him by declaring the radical plat
form a “soap box speech, closely ap
proaching anarchy.”
William Kruse, of Illinois, in at
tacking the Hilquitt platform, said It
could be indorsed without change by
a third party headed by Johnson and
LaFollette.
DEBS, IN PRISON HERE,
NOT TO SPEAK IN RACE
Eugene V. Debs, nominated by the
Socialist partv for the fifth time for
president of the United States, will
speak no word in his campaign as
a prisoner, he declared this after
noon at the federal prison.
“Prison regulations forbid a pris
oner’s taking part in any controversy
or to speak anything that might
arouse a controversy,” he said. “The
prison authorities have been as kind
as could be and I would not say a
word that might stir comment to
their discredit.”
When informed he had special au
thorization to talk he said, “Yes. I
can understand why that would be.
though I cannot say why.”
“Your campaign, then, must be
conducted without your assistance
unless it results In your release
through public sentiment or other
wise,” it was suggested.
“Yes, that’s it,” he assented.
A pleased smile lighted the prison
er’s face when he read the dispatch
telling of his unanimous nomination
by the New York convention.
“That’s the first word I have had,”
he said quietly.
Boy Wanted Elephant
CINCINNATI, Ohio.—Fred H. Dar
ius, probation officer, has sent back
to his parents in Bay City, Mich., a
15-year-old boy, caught as he was
climbing on the backs of a circus ele
phant. The boy acknowledged that
he Intended to abduct the animal, and
drive it away.
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MONARCHS OF WHITE HOUSE GROUNDS
ROMPING YOUNGSTERS ARE BEST TONIC FOR PRESIDENT
Two sturdy boys, who have /**
what is probably the most exclu- * ewihc- ’
sive and distinguished playground '>■ ‘.U>
in America are Gordon Grayson
and Cary T. Grayson, Jr., sons of EjQtlsjjat **
President Wilson’s physician. '
They have a pony cart and their
only rival attraction is the flock : ■ '• l
of White House sheep. The presi- -... x. •>
dent, during his convalesence, * • ■./ 4 .
found much time to watch the '■■H ?: ** Is?
Grayson children at play and the
broad smile they frequently
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G. 0. P. RESCINDS
PROVISION FOR A
SEPARATE TREATY
WASHINGTON, May 13.—The
provision in the Republican peace
resolution requesting the president
to open negotiations with Germany
for a separate treaty was stricken
out today on motion of Senator
Lodge, of Massachusets, the Repub
lican leader.
After the provision had been
stricken out, agreement was reached
for a final vote on the resolution at
4 o’clock Saturday.
A status of peace must be obtained
“in some other way” if it cannot be
secured by ratification of the treaty
and the League of Nations, Senator
Kellogg, of Minnesota, one of the
original “mild reservation” Republic
ans in the treaty fight, declared today
in the senate, supporting the Re
publican peace resolution.
“It is of the utmost importance,”
he said, “that a status of peace be ac
complished. Not only is it necessary
to the Industries of this country and
its trade, but it is important that
the war powers of the president
should cease.
“When resolutions of this character
were originally introduced in the
senate, I was opposed to them. I
wished every opportunity given for
the ratification of the treaty. But
the president has made this impos
sible. ,
“The time has come when some
thing must be done. The nation, as
soon as possible, must be returned
to normal conditions. I shall, there
fore,- vote for the resolution declar
ing the war at an end, which will
restore our' diplomatic, consular, and
commercial relations with the central
Empires, because it seems to me the
only way now of accomplishing this
object. I have no doubt whatever of
the constitutionality of the resolu
tion.”
Naked Woman on the Stage Is Near,
Says Preacher After Co-eds’ Show
“The naked woman on the Amer
ican stage is just one short step into
th® future."
The Rev. Melbourne P. Bownton,
pastor of the Woodlawn Baptist
church, and one of the most promi
nent ministers in Chicago, said this
—and more, much more.
The particular occasion for the
arousing of Rev. Boynton’s indigna
tion was a vaudeville show given by
co-eds of the University of Chicago.
Called “Indecent and Degrading”
The young women appeared in cos
tumes of interesting brevity, smoked
cigarettes, and the lines of the show
in the judgment of the pastor, were
"indecent and degrading.”
“When college women, supposed to
represent the highest type of our
womanhood, appear on a stage,
showing their bodies, smoking ci
garettes, and talking like abandoned
hussies, and their professors sit in
the front row and slap each other
on the back in applause of their dis
play, I believe it is time to call a
halt, if that is possible,” he said.
“Dramatic art Is being smothered
Alas! the Penalty of Old Age,
Causes Actor to Hang Himself
Old Billikens shabby linen suit—
baggy trousers, shapeless coat and
all —hung on its nail, in a rear dress
ing room of a Chicago theater until
a late hour. Then a new wearer
was found for it, and the rollicking
musical comedy proceeded without a
hitch.
Old Billiken is a minor role. He
is on the stage only two minutes.
He totters on and off, clinging to
the arm of a sprightly flapper—de
crepit age and joyous youth. Sam
J. Burton was adapted to the role.
He was seventy years old.
At the matinee that day he was
particularly effective.
And the audience accorded him the
customary tribute of uproarious
laughter in the racing club scene in
the Argentine. That is where Frank
Tinney says to the flapper escorting
him:
"When did you get that old Billi
ken, Mamie? Why don’t you take
him back and put him in his cof
fin?”
Mamie took horn back, but he had
to return for three encores.
After the last curtain call he re
tired to his dressing room. There he
removed the shabby linen suit and
hung it on the accustomed nail. It
belongs to the company.
James Brown, a stage hand, found
him an hour later, hanging from a
steam pipe. He had used the cord
of his dressing gown as a rope, and
had stood on a chair.
A note in his nest pocket read:
“If anything happens to me, please
notify Mark Duncan. He is with
the Chicago Talking Machine com
pany.”
Duncan knew Burton when he used
to live in Franklin, Ind. Tom Don
nelley, himself a white-haired vet
eran, now with the Grace George
company, knew him, too.
“Yes, I remember Sam in the good
old days,” he said. “Back in the
’9os he headed his own company as
Si Perkins. He was a great come
dian. Once he played opposite Lil
lian Russell. But he got old. They
slow up when they get old, you
know. Only minor parts then. He
asked me the other day if drowning
Two Gallons of “Dew”
In Basket of Eggs
i CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., May 13.
| Camouflages used by the dealer in
moonshine whisky in this section was
f9 u pd Thursday morning when Pro
hibition Officer B. B.
Stroud arrested W. M. Owens, a
farmer of New England, Ga., with
two gallons of mountain dew con
cealed in a basket containing ten
dozen eggs brought here for sale.
Owens will be given a preliminary
hearing Friday. He claims he found
the basket and contents on the side
of the road as he was going from bis
home to the train coming to Chatta
nooga.
FIGHT ON CASH
BONUS FEATURE
NOW BREWING
WASHINGTON, May 13.—A fight
against the cash bonus feature of
the soldier relief bill loomed today
in the ways and means committee as
the final obstacle the measure must
overcome before being submitted to
the house for action.
Plans of Chairman Fordney pro
vide for calling up the bill in the
house next Thursday, if a favorable
report can be obtained from the
full committee meanwhile.
The move to eliminate the cash
bonus provision and leave the op
tional benefits of farm or home aid,
vocational training and paid up in
surance has been started by some of
the Republican members of the
committee. Representative Tread
way, Massachusetts, Representative
Tilson, Connecticut, and others, be
lieve the distribution of so much
cash among the service men would
capse another increase in the cost
of living.
The condition cf Representative
Kitchin, North Carolina, stricken
with paralysis while making a
speech in the house nearly a month
ago,’ was so much improved he may
be able to come to the capitol for the
final fight on the bill in the com
mittee of W’hich he is ranking
minority member. In Mr. Kitchin’s
absence there are twenty-four mem
bers and in case of a tie vote on any
important feature of the bill. Dem
ocrats are planning to bring him to
the committee at least long enough
for him to vote. Before his illness
Mr. Kitchin in several statements
indicated opposition to a cash bonus.
by the fleshly appeals. Our colleges
at least should be one place where
the better things might be expected.
“I hav® attended every theatrical
offering In. Chicago in the past year.
From them I have decided that “the
naked woman on the American stage
is just one short step into the fu
ture. A dimpled knee, a voluptuous
form, the bedroom scene, and filthy
conversation are all that the theatri
cal managers of today offer up. Now
colleges and universities are aping
them.”
Faculty Members Defend the Show
Faculty members of the University
of Chicago said they saw nothing im
modest in the show given by the co
eds.
“Perhaps our morals are pretty
low out here," said Prof. James We
ber Linn, “but that is all a matter
of taste. My friends liked it.”
“Some people feel it their duty to
set themselves up as safeguards over
the morals of others,” said Prof.
Robert Morse Lovett. “Dr. Boynton
is of that type. I wasn’t at the Uni
versity vaudeville. I wish to thunder
I had been.” ■
was an easy death. Discouraged. I
told him to forget it’.”
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GERMANS WILL
SHOW CARDS AT
SPA CONFERENCE
BERLIN, May 10.—(Delayed.)—
Germany desires to lay all her cards
openly on the table at the Spa con
ference May 25, Dr. Adolph Koester,
foreign minister, said in an exclu
sive interview today.
The German government hopes to
clear up the ! following points Koes
ter said:
I—Germany’sl—Germany’s exact economic posi
tion.
2. —The German financial situation
and the food and raw stuffs problem.
3. —T.he necessity for security and
internal peace.
Koester expressed hope that Ger
many would be admitted to the con
ference with full powers to enter
into all discussions. If she is ad
mitted only as a “listener” he said,
then she must send delegates in
structed accordingly for their sole
duty will be to receive the accom
plislud decisions of the allied lead
ers. But, the foreign minister be
lieved, the Spa conference will mean
for the first time direct verbal ne
gotiations concerning fulfillment of
the treaty of Versailles.
Koester hoped the Spa conference
wouldn’t be “Versailles over again on
a smaller scale.”
“We expect to be able to show the
entente exactly what Germany’s eco
nomic situation is, what her financial
situation is and what and she needs
in the way of foodstuffs, raw ma
terials and internal security, Koester
said.
“As to the latter, I will be quite
happy if the entente can show us a
way whereby we can maintain order
inside our frontiers with say only
20,000 men and no cannon.
“I hope the Spa meeting will re
sult in a solution for fulfillment of
the treaty. We do not expect to go
to Belgium with any other idea*
The German delegates, Koester con
tinued, will go to Spa prepared to
make concrete proposals regarding
payments of claims and indemnities
but will presuppose that means be
afforded to earn this money. The
coal fields of upper Silesia, he said,
should remain m German hands as
they were essential to her economic
life.
English Dealer to
Offer Cheaper Suits
NEW YORK, May 13.—A1l wool
suits, made in England, will be of
fered American retail clothiers by
J. C. Shannon of the firm of John
Shannon and Son, Ltd., of Walsall,
England, at prices below those of
any American manufacturers of
men’s wearing apparel, according to
Shannon, who arrived here today on
the Cunard Liner Carmania.
Shannon said that because of
cheaper production costs, his com
pany could deliver to American re
tailers men’s suits of the best wool
at $32 a suit.
Water Tank Drops 7 Stories
KANSAS CITY, Mo. —A 12,000-
pound iron water tank, being changed
from the sixth to the seventh story
of a building here, careened in the
wind and crashed to the ground, tak
ing with it a huge iron girder, 60 feet
long. No one was injured and the
only damage was to the buildings and
to the pavement.
The big tank was a part of the
sprinkler system. It is about 33 feet
long and i f««t in diameter. The “I”
beam was twisted into th* shape of
an “S.” The damage amouxts to SSOO.
ROYAL
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SATURDAY, MAY 15, 1920.
BIG ATTENDANCE
MARKS VETERANS’
DUBLIN REUNION
DUBLIN, Ga., May 13 —“The larg
est reunion I have attended for
more than five years, at least,” was
the way General Thomas expressed
himself tday, with over 700 veterans
registered at headquarters at the
chamber of commerce here, exclu
sive of several hundred lady at
tendants, maids and sponsers, while
Secretary Bartlett announced that
it was probably the largest free
convention ever held in the state of
Georgia.
It is generally believed that Grif
fin and Augusta will ask for the
reunion for next year, with Griffin
plainly the favorite. Election of new
officers will take place Thursday
morning, at the business session. A
list of all generals, officers, as well
as distinguished guests attending
the three-day annual convention of
United Confederate veterans in this
city follows: Major General J. A.
Thomas, Dublin, state commander;
Colonel Bridges Smith, Macon, chief
of staff; Colonel S. J. Sheppard. At
lanta, adjutant general northern
brigade; Brigade General D. B. Mor
row, Griffin, commanding western
brigae; Brigade General D. B. Mor
gan, Savannah, commanding south
ern brigade; Major J. C. Robinson.
Augusta, commanding eastern bri
gade; Brigade General A. J. Twiggs,
Savannah, eastern brigade. grand
marshal: Captain L. C. Pope. Dub
lin. chief of-staff; Major M. G. Mer
cuson, commanding cavalry brigade.
Tennille; Colonel H. W. Powell, color
bearer; Rev. W. D. Hammock, Cole
man. Ga.; assistant chaplain; Dr. J.
H. Bullard, Machen, chief surgeon;
Colonel S. M. Mays, Jackson, on
staff. Also General John W. Clark,
of Augusta, past commander of the
Georgia division; Colonel John W.
Lindsey, Atlanta, pension commis
sioner, and Colonel Charles H. Olm-
HAPPY ATLANTA VETERANS
GO TO DUBLIN REUNION
Confederate veterans from Rome,
Dalton, Gainesville and other north
Georgia cities on their way to Dub
lin to the annual state reunion of
Confederate veterans were joined
Wednesday in Atlanta by twenty old
veterans from the Soldiers’ home and
many Other wearers of the gray in
the city.
Those attending the reunion from
the Soldiers’ home were given tickets
by officials of the home, and seventy
two Atlanta veterans were presented
tickets by a committee of the local
chapters of the Daughters of the
Confederacy, headed by Mrs. A. O.
Woodward, which accompanied the
veterans to the station. The train
left here at 12:20 o'clock, bearing a
company supremely happy in the op
portunity of taking part in anothei
reunion.
Moultrie Plans to
Double Population
MOULTRIE, Ga., May 13. —Can
Moultrie repeat it in 1930? Can it
again double its population in ten
years? Can the city come up smil
ing when the next census is taken
with 13,578 ? These are the ques
tions that are being asked here now
since the census bureau’s report
showed that Moultrie population in
crease for the past decade was 102.7
per cent. And the answers that
come from every one here are in the
affirmative. It is pointed out that
there were fifteen hundred people
who were not counted in the recent
census for the reason that they were
without the corporate limits. As
suming that they will be taken into
the city limits it will leave an ac
tual increase of just 5,000, or just
500 a year for ten years.
Savannah Prisoner
Makes Unique Plea
SAVANNAH, Ga., May 13. —Abe
Raskin has made a unique plea to
get out of jail where he has been
for some time. He has filed a habeas
corpus proceeding in the court of
ordinary demanding his freedom on
the ground that the signing of the
Volstead act in January made his
detention illegal. The case is to
come up Saturday. Osborne, Law
rence and Abrahams and R. L. Cold
ing appear for Raskin. It is ex
pected the solicitor general will ap
pear for the state. This will put
Raskin before all the judges in Sa
vannah almost. He was convicted
before the city court, certloraried
the case to the superior court, from
where it went to the court of ap
peals, and now comes before the
ordinary.
111-2 Cents Enough for
Sugar, Says Economist
WASHINGTON, May 13. —Sugar
should sell for 11 1-2 cents a pound
and present prices ranging from 20
to 25 cents are due to profiteering,
W. Jett Lauck, consulting economist
of the railroad brotherhood, told the
railroad labor board today.
Sugar “gougers” will exact a to
tal of $000,000,000 from the American
people this year, or S3O from eacn
family in the country, according to
Lauck, who is urging the board to
grant railroad men increased wages.
Pair With 21 Children Wed
LEMONT, Ill.—Frank Borkowski
and Kathryn Slacheta believe they
are old enough to know their own
minds. Despite the objection of Mrs
Slacheta’s twelve children and Bor
kowaski’s nine offspring, the two were
married here a day or two ago.
thick on floured board; brush
with melted butter, sprinkle with
sugar, cinnamon and raisins.
Roll as for jelly roll; cut into
inch pieces; place with cut
edges up on well-greased pan;
sprinkle with a little sugar and
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oven 30 to 35 minutes; remove
from pan at once.
Parker House Rolls
4 cups flour
1 teaspoon salt
6 teaspoons Royal Baking
Powder
2 tablespoons shortening
cups milk
Sift flour, salt and baking pow
der together. Add melttkl short
ening to milk and add -slowly to
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smooth. Knead lightly on floured
board and roll out % inch thick.
Cut with biscuit cutter. Crease
each circle with back of knife
one side of center. Butter the
small section and fold larger
part well over the small. Place
one inch apart in greased pan.
Allow to stand 15 minutes in
warm place. Brush each with
melted butter and bake in mode
rate oven 15 to 20 minutes.
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